| Literature DB >> 35350137 |
Lauren N Beloate1, Nanyin Zhang1,2.
Abstract
Simultaneously manipulating and monitoring both microscopic and macroscopic brain activity in vivo and identifying the linkage to behavior are powerful tools in neuroscience research. These capabilities have been realized with the recent technical advances of optogenetics and its combination with fMRI, here termed "opto-fMRI." Opto-fMRI allows for targeted brain region-, cell-type-, or projection-specific manipulation and targeted Ca 2 + activity measurement to be linked with global brain signaling and behavior. We cover the history, technical advances, applications, and important considerations of opto-fMRI in anesthetized and awake rodents and the future directions of the combined techniques in neuroscience and neuroimaging.Entities:
Keywords: Ca2+; anesthetized; awake; calcium; functional magnetic resonance imaging; optogenetics; rodent
Year: 2022 PMID: 35350137 PMCID: PMC8957372 DOI: 10.1117/1.NPh.9.3.032208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurophotonics ISSN: 2329-423X Impact factor: 3.593
Fig. 4Correlations between concurrent resting-state fMRI BOLD and optogenetic calcium activation signals in anesthetized and awake rodents. Revised from Refs. 92; 87; 126. Representative results from concurrent calcium and resting-state fMRI studies in (a)–(d) anesthetized and (e) awake rodents. (a) Top panel: Averaged spectrogram of the LFP, bottom panel: resting-state astrocytic calcium signal, with a negative correlation between the peak spike time and the LFP (red dashed line). (b) Top panel: Resting-state astrocytic calcium signal, bottom panel: averaged time course of resting-state BOLD signal, with a negative correlation between the peak calcium spike time and BOLD (red dashed line). (c) Estimated onset times of the LFP PSD (red), resting-state astrocytic calcium spikes (blue) and BOLD signal reduction (gray). Together, (a)–(c) illustrate that astrocyte-specific GCaMP expression can contribute to the understanding of the role in the resting-state BOLD signal. Specifically, these results show that intrinsic calcium spikes in the cortex negatively correlated with neuronal and BOLD signals. (d) Example time course of neuron-specific calcium signal (blue), significant statistical activation map of correlation between BOLD and neuron-specific calcium signal, and averaged time course of BOLD (gray) and a predicted model based on neuronal calcium signaling (black) in primary somatosensory cortex during resting-state in rodents 6 months after optical fiber implantation. This illustrates the ability to chronically perform calcium-fMRI studies. (e) Calcium-fMRI information can also be used to inform upon processing of BOLD activity data. Comparisons of BOLD activity maps and calcium-signal derived dorsal hippocampus maps (used as the ground truth) using different iterations of common preprocessing techniques. LFP, local field potential; PSD, spectral power shift. (a)–(c) Copyright National Academy of Sciences 2018.
Fig. 1Connecting the dots between cell populations, whole-brain activity, and behavior. Opto-fMRI allows for the unique opportunity to genetically and optically manipulate targeted brain regions, projections, or cell types [shown as an implanted optical fiber and (red) light source in the rat brain and represented by targeted (red) neurons] and simultaneously (1) record activity in a region-, projection-, or cell-type-specific manner [shown as an implanted optical fiber and (green) light source and representative time course (green)], (2) correlate behavioral output [shown as an operant lever press and representative bar graph (blue)] and/or (3) measure BOLD fMRI activity [shown as a surface coil over the rat’s brain (gold), MR machine and representative 3D-, whole-brain BOLD activity map] in rodent models.
Fig. 2Concurrent fMRI and optogenetic manipulations in anesthetized and awake rodents. Revised from Refs. 133, 103, 34, 30. Representative experimental designs and results from opto-fMRI studies in (a)–(d) anesthetized and (e)–(h) awake rodents. (a) BOLD activation maps and (b) hemodynamic response functions in anesthetized rats receiving anterior thalamic optogenetic stimulation, illustrating BOLD responses ipsilaterally at the site of stimulation and both ipsilaterally and bilaterally in projection areas. Optogenetic stimulation can be presented alongside other sensory stimulations even in anesthetized rodents, as shown in (c) and (d). (c) Unilateral optogenetic stimulation was presented to the MVN (blue lines) concurrently with broadband noise stimulation (black bars). (d) The BOLD signal and averaged area under the signal profiles show that MVN optogenetic stimulation enhanced broadband noise-induced BOLD signaling in ipsilateral auditory pathway regions (IC, MGB, A1, A2). (e) BOLD activation maps that were averaged across different optogenetic stimulation paradigms targeting the IL in awake rats, showing activation patterns in both cortical and subcortical areas receiving projections from the IL. (f) Optogenetics allows for not only the targeted manipulation of a specific brain region but also cell-type specificity. By injecting a Cre-dependent ChR2 construct (green) into the midbrain of TH-Cre rats, light could be used to manipulate only the TH-expressing, or dopamine, cells in the midbrain. (g) BOLD activation maps during optogenetic stimulation of dopaminergic cells (red) in the midbrain in awake rats, showing robust, ipsilateral increases in activity in the dorsal and ventral striatum along with increases in other areas. BOLD activity during resting-state opto-fMRI can be correlated with behavior outside the scanner. (h) Active and inactive lever presses in rats receiving optogenetic stimulation of dopaminergic cells in the midbrain. Compared with control (YFP) rats (black line), ChR2-expressing rats (blue line) consistently had higher levels of active lever presses (compared with inactive lever presses) for midbrain light delivery, suggesting that the optogenetic stimulation pattern used during opto-fMRI is rewarding. Furthermore, there was a significant correlation between a rat’s preference for the active lever outside the scanner and the change in BOLD activity in the ventral striatum during optogenetic stimulation in the scanner. A1, primary auditory cortex; A2, secondary auditory cortex; AC, anterior cingulate cortex; AGm, medial agranular (frontal) cortex; AId, dorsal agranular insular cortex; AON, anterior olfactory nucleus; BST, bed nucleus of stria terminalis; CL, claustrum; EN, CP, caudate-putamen; endopiriform nucleus; Hb, habenula; IC, inferior colliculus; IL, infralimbic; IP, interpeduncular nucleus; LHy, lateral hypothalamus; LS, lateral septum; MBG, medial geniculate body; MD, mediodorsal nucleus; MS, medial septum; MVN, medial vestibular nucleus; NAcc, nucleus accumbens; OC, orbital cortex; PMd, dorsal premammillary nucleus; PrL, prelimbic; RSC, retrosplenial cortex; SNr, substantia nigra; SUB, subiculum; TH, tyrosine hydroxylase.
Fig. 3Correlations between concurrent stimulus-evoked fMRI BOLD and optogenetic calcium activation signals in anesthetized rodents. Revised from Refs. 122 and 87. (a) BOLD activation maps during visual stimulation in anesthetized rats, from the first published concurrent fMRI and calcium fiber photometry study. (b) Time courses of BOLD (blue) and calcium (green) signals in the superior colliculus during visual stimulation, illustrating the synchronization of the increase in calcium activity and visual stimulation paradigm and the difference in timing between calcium activity and BOLD activity, due to the hemodynamic decay. (c), (d) Through the use of neuron- or astrocyte-specific GCaMP expression, the role of the different types of cells in the brain in stimulus-induced changes in the BOLD signal can be distinguished. (c) Averaged time courses of BOLD (black) and neuronal calcium (blue on left) or astrocytic calcium (red on right) in primary somatosensory cortex during electrical hindpaw stimulation. (d) Significant statistical activation maps of correlations between BOLD and calcium signals during hindpaw stimulation in mice expressing either neuron-specific (left) or astrocyte-specific (right) GCaMP6. In these maps, a voxelwise generalized linear model analysis using the stimulus-evoked calcium signal trace was convolved with the hemodynamic response function as the regressor. S1cl, hind-limb area of the primary sensory cortex contralateral to the stimulated hind paw; S1il, hind-limb area of the primary sensory cortex ipsilateral to the stimulated hind paw; Thal, thalamus.
Overview of opto-fMRI studies included in this review article. The first column specifies wild-type and transgenic mouse and rat strains. The second column specifies the transgene or promotor of the transgenic rodent strains, and the third column states whether male or female rodents were utilized. The following three columns indicate which technique was included in the study: optogenetics, GCaMP, fMRI or a combination of two or three techniques. The seventh column includes whether animals were anesthetized or awake, and the last column is the citation of the study. ? not stated; F, female; LE, Long Evans rat; M, male; SD, Sprague Dawley rat; SSFO, step-function opsin; TH, tyrosine hydroxylase.
| Animal strain | Transgene/promoter | Sex | Optogenetics | GCaMP | fMRI | Awake or anesthetized | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SD | — | M | X | X | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | M | X | X | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | M | X | X | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| C57BL/6 | VGAT-ChR2, Emx1-Cre/Ai32 | M, F | X | Cranial windows | X | Awake | Ref. |
| SD, Fisher | — | F | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| C57BL/6 | ChR2 | ? | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | F | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | M | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | M | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | M, F | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| C57BL/6NCrl | CaMKIIα-Cre | M | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| BAC-Cre mouse | Drd1a-262, Drd2-44 | M | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| LE | TH::Cre | M | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| BAC-Cre | Drd1a-262 (D1), Drd2-44 (D2) | M | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | M | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| LE | TH::Cre | ? | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | F | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| Tg (Fev-cre) 1Esd mouse | ePet-CRE | ? | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | M | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | M | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| W-TChR2V4 rat | ChR2-venus | ? | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| LE | — | M | X | — | X | Awake | Ref. |
| LE | TH::Cre | F | X | — | X | Awake | Ref. |
| tetO-SSFO-ChR2 mouse | Chrm4 (neuron), Mlc1 (astrocyte) | ? | X | — | X | Awake | Ref. |
| C57BL/6 | ChR2 | ? | X | — | X | Awake, anesthetized | Ref. |
| C57BL/6 | ChR2 | ? | X | — | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| LE— | — | M | — | X | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| Fisher | — | F | — | X | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | M | — | X | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| Unspecified rat | — | ? | — | X | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | M | — | X | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| SD | — | ? | — | X | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| Slc17a7-Cre; Camk2a-tTA; Ai93 mouse | GCaMP6f | F, M | — | X | X | Anesthetized | Ref. |
| LE— | — | M | — | X | X | Awake | Ref. |
| LE | — | M | — | X | X | Awake | Ref. |
| LE | — | M | — | X | X | Awake | Ref. |